St Giles Hotel

Bedford Avenue, London, United Kingdom, WC1B 3AS

Hotel Search
Nights

Single

Double

Twin

Triple

Quad

Your Hotel

The St Giles Hotel offers a good standard of budget accommodation right in the heart of London's West End. It has two restaurants and its own pub that cater to all tastes and budgets! You can relax in the lounge area which has Internet Kiosks or use the sports and leisure facility located just beneath the hotel! The hotel supplies a great breakfast-buffet style and vending machines are available on every floor. Located at the junction of Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road you'll find yourself within easy walking distance of the London's main shopping areas, attractions and theatres!



Your Room

Rooms at The St Giles are clean and cosy, offering you a comfortable and relaxed atmosphere in an otherwise busy part of London! The rooms are basic in decor and design but they do have everything you need such as a TV, tea and coffee making facilities and a wake-up service!



Hotel Facilities
  • - 24hr Access
  • - 24hr Front Desk
  • - Air conditioning
  • - Bar, Pub, Lounge
  • - Beauty Salon
  • - Concierge
  • - Conference Facilities
  • - Disable Room
  • - Disable room with walk-in shower
  • - Gym
  • - Internet Access
  • - Laundry
  • - Luggage room facilities
  • - NCP on site
  • - Parking at a discounted price for the guests
  • - Passenger Lift
  • - Restaurant
  • - Sauna
  • - Solarium
  • - Swimming Pool


Room Amenities
  • - Tea/Coffee making facilities
  • - Television
  • - Wake up service


Snap Shot
Location
Central

Hotel Category
Cheap, Popular, Traditional

Hotel Size
Large

Area
Lively


Out and about

Bloomsbury London - The Place is named after 'Blemondisberi' or the manor of William Blemond, who acquired the land in the early-13th century. The area remained rural until 1661, when the 4th Earl of Southampton built Southampton (now Bloomsbury) Square around his house. More grand squares followed including Bedford Square, laid out in 1775 - 80 and the vast Russell Square, added in 1800. By the mid-19th century the district had become mostly residential but it was never a very fashionable area. This explains why large institutions, such as the British Museum and the University of London, were able to acquire large chunks of the district. Many of the Georgian buildings in the splendid squares have also been taken over by the University, including the 'Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology' and the 'Percival David Foundation for Chinese Art'. The University of London's monolithic Senate House was added in the 1930s.